Chang'e-4 And Yutu-2, China's Mission To The Moon's Farside

Highlights

  • China's Chang'e-4 mission delivered the Yutu-2 rover to the Moon's farside in 2019 — the first farside landing ever.
  • Yutu-2 is exploring Von Kármán crater, where an ancient lunar impact may have exposed the Moon’s mantle.
  • Yutu-2 is teaching us about the Moon's history, which helps us learn about the early Solar System and Earth.

China's Chang'e-4 (嫦娥四号) mission delivered a landing platform and a rover named Yutu-2 (玉兔二) to the Moon's farside — the first mission there by any country.

Yutu-2 landed in Von Kármán crater, within the Moon's South Pole-Aitken basin, in January 2019. An ancient lunar impact there may have exposed the Moon’s mantle. By studying this region directly, scientists will learn more about the early solar system and Earth. The mission also demonstrates the feasibility of future human and robotic far side missions.

The Moon’s quiet, airless far side makes it one of the best places in the inner solar system for science applications like radio astronomy. But missions there require a relay satellite since the far side never faces Earth. China launched the Queqiao relay satellite with two SmallSats, Longjiang-1 and 2, in May 2018.

Chang’e-4 and Yutu-2 are continuing to conduct science operations. Both vehicles power down during the two-week lunar night, when temperatures plummet to -173 degrees Celsius (280 degrees Fahrenheit), to avoid damaging their instruments. They must also sleep when the Sun is directly overhead to avoid overheating.

Yutu-2 as seen from Chang'e-4
Yutu-2 as seen from Chang'e-4 Chang'e-4 imaged the Yutu-2 rover in early January 2019 using its Terrain Camera (TCAM).Image: CNSA / CLEP

Chang'e-4 lander instruments:

Landing Camera (LCAM): A black-and-white camera mounted to the bottom of the spacecraft used to image the surface during descent.

Terrain Camera (TCAM): A color camera mounted to a mast on top of the lander that can rotate a full 360 degrees and swing up or down 120 degrees total.

Low Frequency Spectrometer (LFS): Studies low-frequency radio emissions from the Sun and Moon, using the Moon to block radio emissions from Earth.

Lunar Lander Neutrons and Dosimetry experiment (LND): Measures radiation dosages on the Moon to plan for future human exploration. The LND is also attempting to measure the amount of water in the regolith beneath the lander. Contributed by the University of Kiel, Germany.

Lunar biosphere experiment: A publicly chosen experiment in partnership with 28 Chinese universities to see how silkworms, as well as potato and Arabidopsis (a small flowering plant) seeds, grow in lunar gravity.

Chang'e-4 Lander From Yutu-2
Chang'e-4 Lander From Yutu-2 A week after landing, Yutu-2 snapped this picture of the Chang'e-4 lander before driving away to the northwest.Image: CNSA / Thomas Appéré

Yutu-2 science instruments

Panoramic Camera (PCAM): Two color cameras on a rotating mast to capture 360-degree views.

Lunar Penetrating Radar (LPR): A radar instrument used to see subsurface up to more than 100 meters, and the thickness of regolith.

Visible and Near-Infrared Imaging Spectrometer (VNIS): Used to study the mineral composition of the lunar surface around the rover.

Advanced Small Analyzer for Neutrals (ASAN): Experiment to determine how the solar wind interacts with the lunar regolith by observing energetic particles blasted off the surface. Contribution from Institute of space physics, Sweden.

Learn more

  • How studying the Moon helps us learn Earth's origin story
  • Moon features you can see from Earth
  • Read about China's Chang'e-5 Moon sample return mission

Academic resources

  • Jia, Y., Zou, Y., Ping, J., Xue, C., Yan, J., & Ning, Y. (2018). The scientific objectives and payloads of Chang’E−4 Mission. Planetary and Space Science, 162, 207–215.
  • Ling, Z., Qiao, L., Liu, C., Cao, H., Bi, X., Lu, X., Zhang, J., Fu, X., Li, B., & Liu, J. (2019). Composition, mineralogy and chronology of Mare Basalts and non-mare materials in von kármán crater: Landing site of the chang’e−4 mission. Planetary and Space Science, 179, 104741.
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